Sunday, 17 June 2018

Sermon Notes; A Father's Day Special


University of Benin 1976, Adewunmi a Bio-Chemistry Bachelors of Science  student about to see Fela Kuti for the first time at a club on the university campus. Take the time out to picture this, away from Lagos for the first time, at the peak of his youth, mentally drooling at the opportunity to satiate his hunger for music and art with a gourmet meal in the form of Fela. The King of Afrobeats, someone who had immortalised himself with his defiance of the tyranny and challenged the status quo, that was the Nigerian Military regime.

For those of us who have watched the YouTube clips of Fela’s brilliance on stage and sometimes during his songs, we are all familiar with the occasional pause filled with the instrumental blessings of himself and his band. But sometimes, Fela would take time out to rant. At this point, I must apologise, because you see like me some of us still make the grave mistake of calling his TEACHINGS rants.

Now back to the story; Adewunmi (probably accompanied by some friends, I wouldn’t know, my father never said while telling this story) still in awe of seeing this icon on stage for the first time, like everyone in the crowd, he was attentive as ever to Fela’s performance. When Fela paused to rap/teach, Dewunmi listened as though he was at one of his lectures. Fela spoke of Nigerians who had their minds enslaved; he cited an example using the Nigerian lawyers/legal system. He mocked them for wearing black gowns and wigs even whilst they sweated profusely, saying he didn’t study science but he knew that black absorbed heat and the dressing didn’t suit the weather of the country.

As we do now when we listen to Fela’s teachings, they laughed and applauded. However, Dewunmi didn’t, he digested the message that his peers missed. They all will have left that night, bellies filled with the dish served in the form of this prophet ahead of his time. However, Fela was eager to make sure the message wasn’t missed, so he scolded them and asked them not to clap or laugh away the message he was trying to pass across. For the rest of the night, Dewunmi recalled how the crowd were afraid to clap or laugh at any of his other teachings. Whether this was out of fear of being scolded once more or not, neither I nor Adewunmi will ever know.
As is with my family every Sunday after the church service, I do not know whether its intentional, we often meet to discuss the sermon and our takes from it. This Father’s Day wasn’t any different. I really tapped into what the priest said about being a real father, a great father, the father that Christ approves of, rather than just being a good father. As he listed all the qualities, his brush strokes painted a vivid image of my father in my mind, and throughout the rest of the service my heart was field with gratitude for the man, and the woman (his wife) I had been blessed with to call parents.

However, during the sermon, majority of the congregation found a reason to laugh at examples that the priest cited, and for the life of me I couldn’t find humour in his entire sermon. Not because I’m not one for laughs, to be honest my anatomy is probably made up of all funny bones (HAHAHAHA, just in case you readers don’t laugh along). Alas, as almost all in the congregation laughed, I struggled to see humour and instead realigned my focus to the word of God.
It filled me with joy, when during our usual Sunday after sermon chat, my rents (they don’t enjoy when I call them that) expressed how they too couldn’t help but wonder how or why the congregation found humour in what was meant solely to inform and correct those who were fathering their children in the wrong way. That accompanied by his story time lesson of how Fela made sure his crowd didn’t leave without fully grasping his message, it was no wonder I was bloated with joy. Joy at the fact that I didn’t, like the audience, excluding my father (and probably some other select few) clap instead of listen and learn from a message perfect for fathers, fathers to be and the sons of those fathers to be.

LISTEN, DON’T CLAP.